Monday 30 September 2013

Let's talk Routine Woodrockers!



Saturday is always a hectic time in the Woodrock office! Although our permanent and skeleton staff and volunteers have a plan of action, routine and chores that are needed to be done, many a time our plans get thrown out of the window. This is either due to unannounced arrivals of humans and animals. Unexpected dog illness or feuds and many many unexpected calls!

 
Many people are astonished at the intense organization it takes to run an NPO like Woodrock Animals. The answer is made up of multiple parts but perhaps the largest component is the staff who maintain the operations and systems.

This week, I asked Fiona and Noel to give our blog readers a day to day breakdown in the running operations of Woodrock- it is evident from their attention to detail and care that they love their jobs and working with animals is their passion!

6 am :Wake up and doors to each kennel are opened.
Blankets are shaken, beds are made and water filled.

7 30 : 
Each dog is given a good morning cuddle and biscuit snack before breakfast.

8:00: First feed of the day is distributed. Pellets are accessible at all times.

9:00: Excercise and play time starts. Pups go into the Excercise runs with toys, peanut butter filled hooves and small plastic ponds filled with water.
Large dogs get their daily walk- they have access to plunge baths should they enjoy watersport while on their walk.


All kennels are scrubbed down and washed out while the dogs are playing.

16:00 Feeding time- a hot meal is served containing nutritious meat varieties. 

18:00 Lock down. Kennel interleading door is closed and the dogs sleep indoors.

Notes : The Winter schedule is slightly different as dogs get to sleep in later and have indoor heating. They are also given a bed time snack as their bed time is slightly earlier. 

Music is played at all times throughout the kennels.

2 permanent kennel staff sleep in quarters next to the dogs so they are never unattended.

In between jobs all dogs are dewormed on alternate months.

Nails are clipped weekly.

Brushing is done as necessary.

Ear cleaning is done once a month.

Stitches are removed in our medical room.

All dogs receive their vaccinations. 5 in 1 and Rabies on arrival.

Information boards outside each kennel are updated daily.

Property inspections are done by Nicholas, Estelle and Fiona.

All animals are supervised at all times.









Friday 20 September 2013

Old dogs and an undying love!


This week, I have scoured online sources and many a paperback to find you a piece of writing that I think truly epitomizes the love and bond celebrated between an animal and his owner. I receive countless emails with individuals telling of their best friends departure and it is evident that all pain is the same. I hope you are moved as much as I was- it is lengthy but well worth the read! Plus Ive added some Woodrock oldies as eye candy in between!
until next week
L

Please note the article is the intellectual property from another site.

So without further introduction I urge you to read the article below:all content can be found at the following address:


The last word: Why old dogs are the best dogs They can be eccentric, slow afoot, even grouchy. But dogs live out their final days, says The Washington Post’s Gene Weingarten, with a humility and grace we all could learn from.


Not long before his death, Harry and I headed out for a walk that proved eventful. He was nearly 13, old for a big dog. Walks were no longer the slap-happy Iditarods of his youth, frenzies of purposeless pulling in which we would cast madly off in all directions, fighting for command. Nor were they the exuberant archaeological expeditions of his middle years, when every other tree or hydrant or blade of grass held tantalizing secrets about his neighbors. In his old age, Harry had transformed his walk into a simple process of elimination—a dutiful, utilitarian, head-down trudge. When finished, he would shuffle home to his ratty old bed, which graced our living room because Harry could no longer ascend the stairs. On these walks, Harry seemed oblivious to his surroundings, absorbed in the arduous responsibility of placing foot before foot before foot before foot. But this time, on the edge of a small urban park, he stopped to watch something. A man was throwing a Frisbee to his dog. The dog, about Harry’s size, was tracking the flight expertly, as Harry had once done, anticipating hooks and slices by watching the pitch and roll and yaw of the disc, as Harry had done, then catching it with a joyful, punctuating leap, as Harry had once done, too.

(SEE OUR FAVORITE COMMENTS FROM THEWEEK.COM READERS ON THIS STORY)

Harry sat. For 10 minutes, he watched the fling and catch, fling and catch, his face contented, his eyes alight, his tail a-twitch. Our walk home was almost … jaunty.

Some years ago, The Washington Post invited readers to come up with a midlife list of goals for an underachiever. The first-runner-up prize went to: “Win the admiration of my dog.”

It’s no big deal to love a dog; they make it so easy for you. They find you brilliant, even if you are a witling. You fascinate them, even if you are as dull as a butter knife. They are fond of you, even if you are a genocidal maniac. Hitler loved his dogs, and they loved him.

Puppies are incomparably cute and incomparably entertaining, and, best of all, they smell exactly like puppies. At middle age, a dog has settled into the knuckleheaded matrix of behavior we find so appealing—his unquestioning loyalty, his irrepressible willingness to please, his infectious happiness. But it is not until a dog gets old that his most important virtues ripen and coalesce. Old dogs can be cloudy-eyed and grouchy, gray of muzzle, graceless of gait, odd of habit, hard of hearing, pimply, wheezy, lazy, and lumpy. But to anyone who has ever known an old dog, these flaws are of little consequence. Old dogs are vulnerable. They show exorbitant gratitude and limitless trust. They are without artifice. They are funny in new and unexpected ways. But, above all, they seem at peace.

Kafka wrote that the meaning of life is that it ends. He meant that our lives are shaped and shaded by the existential terror of knowing that all is finite. This anxiety informs poetry, literature, the monuments we build, the wars we wage—all of it. Kafka was talking, of course, about people. Among animals, only humans are said to be self-aware enough to comprehend the passage of time and the grim truth of mortality. How, then, to explain old Harry at the edge of that park, gray and lame, just days from the end, experiencing what can only be called wistfulness and nostalgia? I have lived with eight dogs, watched six of them grow old and infirm with grace and dignity, and die with what seemed to be acceptance. I have seen old dogs grieve at the loss of their friends. I have come to believe that as they age, dogs comprehend the passage of time, and, if not the inevitability of death, certainly the relentlessness of the onset of their frailties. They understand that what’s gone is gone.

What dogs do not have is an abstract sense of fear, or a feeling of injustice or entitlement. They do not see themselves, as we do, as tragic heroes, battling ceaselessly against the merciless onslaught of time. Unlike us, old dogs lack the audacity to mythologize their lives. You’ve got to love them for that.

The product of a Kansas puppy mill, Harry was sold to us as a yellow Labrador retriever. I suppose it was technically true, but only in the sense that Tic Tacs are technically “food.” Harry’s lineage was suspect. He wasn’t the square-headed, elegant type of Labrador you can envision in the wilds of Canada hunting for ducks. He was the shape of a baked potato, with the color and luster of an interoffice envelope. You could envision him in the wilds of suburban Toledo, hunting for nuggets of dried food in a carpet.

His full name was Harry S Truman, and once he’d reached middle age, he had indeed developed the unassuming soul of a haberdasher. We sometimes called him Tru, which fit his loyalty but was in other ways a misnomer: Harry was a bit of an eccentric, a few bubbles off plumb. Though he had never experienced an electrical shock, whenever he encountered a wire on the floor—say, a power cord leading from a laptop to a wall socket—Harry would stop and refuse to proceed. To him, this barrier was as impassable as the Himalayas. He’d stand there, waiting for someone to move it. Also, he was afraid of wind.

While Harry lacked the wiliness and cunning of some dogs, I did watch one day as he figured out a basic principle of physics. He was playing with a water bottle in our backyard—it was one of those 5-gallon cylindrical plastic jugs from the top of a water cooler. At one point, it rolled down a hill, which surprised and delighted him. He retrieved it, brought it back up and tried to make it go down again. It wouldn’t. I watched him nudge it around until he discovered that for the bottle to roll, its long axis had to be perpendicular to the slope of the hill. You could see the understanding dawn on his face; it was Archimedes in his bath, Helen Keller at the water spigot.

That was probably the intellectual achievement of Harry’s life, tarnished only slightly by the fact that he spent the next two hours insipidly entranced, rolling the bottle down and hauling it back up. He did not come inside until it grew too dark for him to see.

I believe I know exactly when Harry became an old dog. He was about 9 years old. It happened at 10:15 on the evening of June 21, 2001, the day my family moved from the suburbs to the city. The move took longer than we’d anticipated. Inexcusably, Harry had been left alone in the vacated house—eerie, echoing, empty of furniture and of all belongings except Harry and his bed—for eight hours. When I arrived to pick him up, he was beyond frantic.

He met me at the door and embraced me around the waist in a way that is not immediately reconcilable with the musculature and skeleton of a dog’s front legs. I could not extricate myself from his grasp. We walked out of that house like a slow-dancing couple, and Harry did not let go until I opened the car door.

He wasn’t barking at me in reprimand, as he once might have done. He hadn’t fouled the house in spite. That night, Harry was simply scared and vulnerable, impossibly sweet and needy and grateful. He had lost something of himself, but he had gained something more touching and more valuable. He had entered old age.


In the year after our move, Harry began to age visibly, and he did it the way most dogs do. First his muzzle began to whiten, and then the white slowly crept backward to swallow his entire head. As he became more sedentary, he thickened a bit, too.

On walks, he would no longer bother to scout and circle for a place to relieve himself. He would simply do it in mid-plod, like a horse, leaving the difficult logistics of drive-by cleanup to me. Sometimes, while crossing a busy street, with cars whizzing by, he would plop down to scratch his ear. Sometimes, he would forget where he was and why he was there. To the amusement of passersby, I would have to hunker down beside him and say, “Harry, we’re on a walk, and we’re going home now. Home is this way, okay?” On these dutiful walks, Harry ignored almost everything he passed. The most notable exception was an old, barrel-chested female pit bull named Honey, whom he loved. This was surprising, both because other dogs had long ago ceased to interest Harry at all, and because even back when they did, Harry’s tastes were for the guys. 

Still, when we met Honey on walks, Harry perked up. Honey was younger by five years and heartier by a mile, but she liked Harry and slowed her gait when he was around. They waddled together for blocks, eyes forward, hardly interacting but content in each other’s company. I will forever be grateful to Honey for sweetening Harry’s last days. 

Some people who seem unmoved by the deaths of tens of thousands through war or natural disaster will nonetheless grieve inconsolably over the loss of the family dog. People who find this behavior distasteful are often the ones without pets. It is hard to understand, in the abstract, the degree to which a companion animal, particularly after a long life, becomes a part of you. I believe I’ve figured out what this is all about. It is not as noble as I’d like it to be, but it is not anything of which to be ashamed, either.

In our dogs, we see ourselves. Dogs exhibit almost all of our emotions; if you think a dog cannot register envy or pity or pride or melancholia, you have never lived with one for any length of time. What dogs lack is our ability to dissimulate. They wear their emotions nakedly, and so, in watching them, we see ourselves as we would be if we were stripped of posture and pretense. Their innocence is enormously appealing. When we watch a dog progress from puppyhood to old age, we are watching our own lives in microcosm. Our dogs become old, frail, crotchety, and vulnerable, just as Grandma did, just as we surely will, come the day. When we grieve for them, we grieve for ourselves.

From the book Old Dogs, text by Gene Weingarten and Michael S. Williamson, based on a longer excerpt that originally appeared in The Washington Post. ©2008 by Gene Weingarten and Michael S. Williamson. Reprinted by permission of Simon & Schuster Inc.

Sunday 15 September 2013

Let's hear from Fi! Guest blogger 4!

Woodrock have the pleasure of calling a few special people part of our philanthropic family. This week, we asked one of our foster mommys-Fiona to tell us her thoughts on Woodrock! Fi has become a crucial part of our team and she goes out of her way to help us and many animals in need however she can!

I first heard about Woodrock when Estelle put out a plea, asking for somebody to foster a little female Jack Russel called Tiny.


She was placed with my son, about a week later.
I am very much into fostering and in fact if I don’t have a foster fur baby at any time I tend to feel despondent.
Of all the people that I have offered to help out, Stella is the only one that has ever bothered to come back to me, to let me know either way.
Anyway, enough about me.
First impressions:
When the gate opens, you are sure to be greeted by a friendly face, everybody including the extremely, hardworking staff behind the lines, I have never seen so many welcoming faces before.
Lovely little stoep area, where you can play with and get to know your choice of fur baby, once Woodrock and yourself are happy with the match, there will of course be paperwork, and house checks.
The office is just on the side of the stoep, always very neat and tidy, as well as welcoming.
Just be sure that you are there for the right reasons, otherwise don’t even bother going there.   
Apart from fur babies, they also have ducks, ponies and donkeys.
The Woodrock family has become my second family:
Stella is what I call Dilly, a bit absent minded, but that is just because she is so very busy.
She also works as well.
Lola, Stella’s daughter is a little gem, she is very arty, and also very dedicated to Woodrock.
Fee is an absolute angel, who never stops working, even though she had just been mauled by a feral cat, and had to have 4 stitches, she was at work as usual.
Also mustn’t forget about Johnny, he is also a very important person to the team, arrives every Saturday and walks and walks the dogs.
Susanne who is totally engrossed in her book sales, will travel far and wide to establish other areas where she can put  books that are on sale. Also to find good books for her “customers”.
I believe that this whole Woodrock Family is something else, in my eyes everyone is so dedicated, and it runs like a well oiled machine.






Sunday 8 September 2013

A word from Johnny

So we are fully into Spring now Woodrockers and we have had a very busy September so far! Doing some stats for the year so far it appears that Woodrock has homed approximately 300 dogs. Each and every person on our team is an essential piece in our success. Johnny is a volunteer walker who has become one such member of the Woodrock family. He appears without a doubt every Saturday bearing a smile, miscellaneous donated supplies and a positive work ethic- this week he has given his voice to the blog. I asked him what it is like to volunteer and how his history has affected this.

Hallo to all you animal lovers reading this blog. Let me first of introduce myself. My name is Johnny Wiid. I am a retired police detective of the SAPS. I was born on the West Rand, attended Florida Park High School and after completing my schooling joined the SAPS. During my career as detective I had close relationships with various animal rescue organizations regarding animals being abandoned, strays and (in particular) abused. I have found that being exposed to the wide variety of animal abuses enabled me to make a practical contribution to the rehabilitation of rescued animals. It is a small contribution but one that can help make a difference. I have now devoted my time to help rehabilitate abused animals.
 
You too can make a difference and can also pat yourself on the back by saying, “I had a part in making a difference of an abused animal,” simply by donating financially, any animal equipment or food. Remember rescue organizations depend on donations to successfully provide an abused animal a second chance in life.
 
I want to share with you my personal experience with animal abuse in the criminal world, no I am not discussing dog fights that are illegal and the horrific injuries sustained by this barbaric entertainment. (I have never experienced  an investigation of a dog fight as this was investigated by a specialised unit within the detective service.) The suburbs where I had to perform detective duties was in the heart where illegal drugs, firearms and liquor was being distributed and where “gangsters ruled” was rife. As some of you are not aware, four (4) types of dog breeds are utilized by these unscrupulous people, to whom will be referred to as dealers, to guard their premises against rival gangs and alert them when the police have arrived to search and confiscate any illegal commodities found on the premises as well as to effect an arrest. The breeds are Pit Bulls Terriers, Bull Terriers, Doberman (Mainly black coloured) and English Bull Mastiff. The Pit Bull Terrier is the most popular breed utilized amongst these dealers. The dealers confine the dog by placing a rope or an industrial chain of two (2)meters in length around the neck of the dog and attach the chain or rope to an immoveable object. The dogs movement is limited to a small area day in and day out. Shelters are not always provided for the dog. Taking the dog out for exercise is non-existent. The dog is placed at a strategic point on the premises preventing access to the premises by rival dealers or to delay the police from gaining access in order to dispose the illegal commodities. This delay tactic was one of many causes that the dealer of illegal commodities was escaping justice. At a crime combatting meeting a plan was devised on how to over come various obstructions encountered at these illegal distribution outlets and to include various roll players to participate in the operation. One of the many roll players included was the assistance of an animal rescue organisation to remove any dogs obstructing access points. (e.g. Front door or back door.)
 
Myself, together with a team of detectives and various roll players, which included members of an animal rescue organisation then carried out a raid on a premises where illegal commodities were being distributed. The Pit Bull Terrier that was chained near to the front gate was being controlled with a control pole by a member of the animal rescue organisation. Seconds after the dog was under control, detectives gained access to the premises. After arresting the owner of the house for the possession of illegal commodities we discovered he was also the owner of the dog being controlled with a control pole at the gate. There was a further four (4) Pit Bull Terriers confined by means of an industrial chain at strategic points on the premises.  One of the Pit Bull Terriers ears were cropped indicating was used in dog fights but this could not be verified conclusively. Another Pit Bull Terrier was found in the bathroom.  At the points where the dogs were confined there  was no bowls in sight for food or water or if the bowls were available the bowls were dry and empty.  The owner of the dogs failed to contact any person to care for the dogs and realising that he would be incarcerated for an undetermined length of time he surrendered all the animals to the animal rescue organisation.
Sadly, not all of these dogs can be rehabilitated and the final decision on the future of these dogs rests with animal rescue organisation. Also bare in mind that these dogs rescued under these conditions are anti-social, in poor condition and sickly. This type of dog has never been taken to a veterinary surgeon to be inoculated or treated for any ailment it might had contracted. In most of the cases where I dealt with the investigation of the distribution of illegal commodities the scenario was similar as I have described. In some instances when the penetration of illegal outlets was to be executed immediately there was no time to assemble all the roll players, the control of the dog at the vital access point was controlled by myself, having obtained a control pole, allowing detectives to carry out their tasks. I must add that the removal of  these abused dogs from these illegal outlets was one of the many contributions that led to a decrease in the illegal distributions of commodities in some of the suburbs targeted.
 
Now for a rescue that has a more happier conclusion. Myself and a colleague were driving through one the suburbs where we perform our duties as police officials, when we noticed a brown coloured dog with blood on its face and throat area. A short length of rope was dangling from its throat area. It was obvious that the dog had escaped from where ever he was confined or as it sometimes occurred escaped from where his human captives attempted to hang him on a structure or tree for being a nuisance. After bringing the car to a stop, my colleague approached the dog from the front while I approached the dog from the rear. Neither of us knowing how the dog was to react when we confronted it. The dog was of medium size and of a mixed breed. I was able to grab the dog from the rear and pick him up while my colleague calmed down the dog. We put the dog in the car and drove to a nearby animal rescue organisation that had a hospital on the premises and a veterinary surgeon on standby. On arrival at the hospital, the veterinary surgeon examined the dog and found that the rope was embedded in the flesh of the neck and had torn into the throat. The embedded rope was methodically and painstakingly removed. The veterinary surgeon discovered that the open wound was septic and could not be stitched until the septicaemia had cleared. I left the dog in the care of the hospital staff.  date I have no idea how the dog sustained these horrific injuries. Nobody enquired about the dog’s whereabouts neither did anyone  come forward to claim him.
Three(3) months after this rescue I was informed that the dog now named Lucky had fully recovered from his injuries. Lucky and Highway (A three legged Jack Russel Terrier that had his hind leg amputated after being run over by a motor vehicle) was Lucky’s kennel mate were adopted by a wine farmer and his wife. Lucky and Highway are living their second chance in true luxury.
 
I will leave you with a thought of an interesting statement of an animal behaviourist concerning the bad behaviour of a dog, “Don’t blame the dog for its bad behaviour. Blame the owner.”
 







Until next time and continue to be an animal lover.
 
Johnny Wiid